Book of Revelation Believed That the Stars in the Sky Were the Size of Figs
Looking at the text of verse 13 of the first chapter of the Book of Revelation of John the Apostle, we find it says:
13 And the stars of heaven fell to the earth, as a fig tree casts its untimely figs when it is shaken by a great wind.
Of course, the stars in the sky cannot fall - all of them, of course, as he did not specify that only some of them fell - to the earth, and the stars are hundreds and perhaps thousands of times larger than the earth, except as he described them as being like the fruit of the fig tree that falls to the earth when shaken by a great wind.
And in verses 3 and 4 of chapter 12 of the same book we find him saying:
3 And another sign appeared in heaven: Behold, a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his heads seven crowns. 4 And his tail drew a third of the stars of heaven , and cast them to the earth . And the dragon stood before the woman who was ready to give birth, for to devour her child as soon as she was born.
Here the dragon struck with his tail a third of the stars in the sky and threw them to the earth. The same meaning is that he believes that the stars are the size of a fig or an apricot, and we do not know how the stars fall to the earth because if one star falls to the earth it will turn it into vapor in seconds.
This cartoon also raises an important question:
What is the size of this dragon compared to the Earth that struck a third of the stars with its tail only? What about its body
that is on the Earth?
Myths, jokes and stories suitable for Hollywood, although it is impossible for any American director to depict a dragon with this strange contradiction. This is the greatest evidence for Christians that the writer writes from an earthly, human perspective of the heavens and not a revelation from heaven to the Earth.
But you must be convinced and believe.